During the 52-year-old’s appearance, the hunting guide denied any wrongdoing over the hunt in early July when Dr Palmer paid $55 000 to shoot the lion with a bow and arrow.

The hunt provoked worldwide outrage after it emerged that Cecil was a well-known attraction among visitors to the park and was wearing a tracking collar as part of an Oxford University research project.

However, Mr Bronkhorst seemed less concerned about the death of the lion than the impact it’s had on him and Dr Palmer.

Told the man via NBC News: ‘It’s been a traumatic experience and I wish it was over. I regret shooting a lion called Cecil… any other lion (and) I don’t think it would have been a problem.’

‘I think it’s frivolous and I think it’s wrong,’ when asked about the charges against him.

The hunting guide added that hunting is ‘an integral part of our country and it’s got to continue and if we do not use wildlife sustainably, there will be no wildlife’.

Adding: ‘I feel sorry for my client (Dr Palmer). He is a good man. He did nothing wrong.’

Since being outed as the American hunter behind the felling of Cecil the lion, the Minnesota dentist apologized for killing Cecil, a 13-year-old male renowned for his distinctive black mane, whilst implicating Bronkhorst for misleading him.

The apology rather than placating widespread condemnation against him in fact only served to further infuriate social media users and animal activists who claimed that Palmer had acted without regard for the law by design and had willfully tortured the lion over the course of 40 hours before finally shooting it dead and skinning it and taking its head, while leaving its lifeless torso to rot.

In the latest round of condemnation against the hunter who has since gone into hiding, vandals on Monday overnight

defaced the well to do dentist’s vacation home on Marco Island, Florida.

Speaking last week, Mr Bronkhorst said: ‘I was engaged by a client to do a hunt for him and we shot an old male lion that I believed was past his breeding age. I don’t think that I’ve done anything wrong.

‘It has probably changed my family’s life, my business, forever… We have had many, many death threats.

‘We grew up hunting, our forefathers grew up hunting, and it is part of our culture.’

Zimbabwean authorities have launched a crackdown on illegal hunting since the death of Cecil, though some have argued that hunting plays a key role in conservation and provides essential revenue and jobs.

The hunting of lions, leopards and elephants in the area around the national park in western Zimbabwe has been suspended, as has hunting with bows and arrows.

Bronkhorst and Mr Palmer have denied any wrongdoing, and have claimed they were unaware that Cecil had been collared and protected. Calls to have Dr Palmer extradited are currently being reviewed by the White House after a petition garnered more than 140 000 signatures.